n.[C]
- 狗
He keeps a
dog to guard the house.
他养一条狗看家。
- 雄狗;(狐、狼等的)雄兽
- 【口】家伙
He is a lucky
dog.
他是一个幸运的家伙。
- 【口】无赖,流氓
- 【美】【俚】失败;失望
- 【美】【俚】蹩脚货;丑女人
vt.
- (灾难等)缠住
Injuries
dogged the football team all season.
这个橄榄球队整个赛季都为队员受伤而困扰。
- 尾随,跟踪
The police
dogged the suspected thief.
警察跟踪偷窃嫌疑犯。
ad.
- 极度地,非常
短语
die like a dog
- 悲惨地死去
He was kept in prison for weeks without food and
died like a dog.
他被囚禁了几星期,没有食物果腹,最后悲惨地死去。
Every dog has its day.
- 凡人皆有得意日。
Give a dog a bad name and hang him.
- 人言可畏。
He who has a mind to beat his dog will easily find his stick.
- 欲加之罪,何患无辞。
Let sleeping dogs lie.
- 莫惹是非。
Love me, love my dog.
- 爱屋及乌。
not (even) have/stand a dog's chance
- 没有机会;不可能
They do
not have a dog's chance of buying a house this year because the bank has refused to lend them any money.
他们今年没机会买房子,因为银行已拒绝给他们提供贷款。
派生
辨析
n.
- a domesticated carnivorous mammal probably descended from the wolf, with a barking or howling voice, an acute sense of smell, and non-retractile claws.
[Canis familiaris.]
▸a wild animal resembling this, in particular any member of the dog family (Canidae), which includes the wolf, fox, coyote, jackal, and other species.
▸the male of such an animal.
▸
(the dogs)
Brit. informal greyhound racing.
- informal a contemptible man.
▸
dated a person of a specified kind:
you lucky dog!
▸informal, chiefly N. Amer. a thing of poor quality; a failure.
▸
(usu. in phr. turn dog on)
Austral./NZ informal an informer or traitor.
- informal, derogatory an unattractive woman.
- used in names of dogfishes, e.g. spur-dog.
- a mechanical device for gripping.
-
(dogs)
N. Amer. informal feet.
v.
(dogs, dogging, dogged)
- follow closely and persistently.
- (of a problem) cause continual trouble for.
-
(dog it)
informal, chiefly N. Amer. act lazily.
- grip with a mechanical device.
Phrase
- dog-and-pony show
N. Amer. informal an elaborate and ostentatious presentation or event. - dog eat dog
used to refer to a ruthlessly competitive situation. - a dog in the manger
a person who prevents others from having things that they do not need themselves.
[alluding to the fable of the dog that lay in a manger to prevent the ox and horse from eating the hay.]
- a dog's age
N. Amer. informal a very long time. - a dog's dinner
(or breakfast)
Brit. informal a mess. - a dog's life
an unhappy and oppressed existence. - go to the dogs
informal deteriorate badly. - not a dog's chance
no chance at all. - put on the dog
N. Amer. informal behave in a pretentious or ostentatious way.
Derivative
- dogdom n.
- doggish adj.
- doglike adj.
Etymology
OE docga, of unknown origin.